Developmental studies have shown that infants exploit ordinal information to extract and generalize repetition-based rules from a sequence of items. Within the visual modality, this ability is constrained by the spatial layout within which items are delivered given that a left-to-right orientation boosts infants' rule learning, whereas a right-to-left orientation hinders this ability. Infants' rule learning operates across different domains and can also be transferred across modalities when learning is triggered by speech. However, no studies have investigated whether the transfer of rule learning occurs across different domains when language is not involved. Using a visual habituation procedure, we tested 7-month-old infants' ability to extract rule-like patterns from numerical sequences and generalize them to non-numerical sequences of visual shapes and whether this ability is affected by the spatial orientation. Infants were first habituated to left-to-right or right-to-left oriented numerical sequences instantiating an ABB rule and were then tested with the familiar rule instantiated across sequences of single geometrical shapes and a novel (ABA) rule. Results showed a transfer of learning from number to visual shapes for left-to-right oriented sequences but not for right-to-left oriented ones (Experiment 1) even when the direction of the numerical change (increasing vs. decreasing) within the habituation sequences violated a small-left/large-right number-space association (Experiment 2). These results provide the first demonstration that visual rule learning mechanisms in infancy operate at a high level of abstraction and confirm earlier findings that left-to-right oriented directional cues facilitate infants' representation of order.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105270 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Penn Neurodegeneration Genomics Center, Dept of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Background: NIAGADS is a national data repository that offers qualified investigators access to genomic data for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementia. In addition, NIAGADS has made substantial effort to curate, harmonize, standardize, and disseminate AD-relevant variant, gene, and sequence annotations from publications, functional genomics datasets, and summary statistics deposited at NIAGADS. These results are made available to the public in a collection of interactive knowledgebases (AD Variant Portal, FILER Functional Genomics Repository, VariXam, Alzheimer's GenomicsDB & Genome Browser), all of which are accessible programmatically via the NIAGADS API.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Lab Med
January 2025
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL, United States.
Background: Our institution involves our pathology residents in departmental quality initiatives and in identifying needs for operational improvements. The solutions achieved by these projects have effects beyond the laboratory, and ultimately help to improve diagnostic stewardship by supporting the clinician's ability to obtain necessary biochemical information at the right time. A project highlighting a successful venture is described here in which our investment in new total laboratory automation was not meeting our goals for autoverification rates, resulting in less than expected improvements to turnaround times (TAT).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Sleep Med
January 2025
Natural Interaction Lab, Thom Building, Department of Engineering, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Study Objectives: Home sleep apnea testing based on peripheral arterial tonometry (P-HSAT) is increasingly being deployed because of its ability to test for multiple nights. However, P-HSATs do not have access to modalities such as airflow and cortical arousals and instead rely on alternative sources of information to detect respiratory events. This results in an a-priori performance disadvantage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Institute of Theoretical Computer Science, Graz University of Technology, Graz, Austria.
Recent experimental studies in the awake brain have identified a rule for synaptic plasticity that is instrumental for the instantaneous creation of memory traces in area CA1 of the mammalian brain: Behavioral Time scale Synaptic Plasticity. This one-shot learning rule differs in five essential aspects from previously considered plasticity mechanisms. We introduce a transparent model for the core function of this learning rule and establish a theory that enables a principled understanding of the system of memory traces that it creates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Institute of Neuroscience, Key Laboratory of Brain Cognition and Brain-Inspired Intelligence Technology, Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, 200031, China.
Humans can flexibly change rules to categorize sensory stimuli, but their performance degrades immediately after a task switch. This switch cost is believed to reflect a limitation in cognitive control, although the bottlenecks remain controversial. Here, we show that humans exhibit a brief reduction in the efficiency of using sensory inputs to form a decision after a rule change.
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